Henrietta Poynter

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Henrietta Malkiel Poynter (1901–1968) was an American journalist and businesswoman credited as the co-founder of Congressional Quarterly with her husband, Nelson Poynter.

Henrietta Malkiel was born in New York City in 1901, the only child of political activists Leon and Theresa Malkiel.[1] Her parents were Russian Jewish immigrants and founded the New York Daily Call, a Socialist newspaper.[2] Her mother, a women's rights and labor activist, was the author of The Diary of a Shirtwaist Striker.[3] She attended Hunter College High School and graduated from the Columbia Journalism School in 1922.[4]

Career

Personal life and legacy

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